Large majority for Bätzing-Lichtenthäler as SPD leader

by times news cr

2024-10-02 15:56:35

For the first time, a woman is at the head of the SPD in Rhineland-Palatinate. Bätzing-Lichtenthäler is elected with a large majority – and charts the course until the state elections in 2026.

The Rhineland-Palatinate SPD also elected its state parliamentary group leader Sabine Bätzing-Lichtenthäler as party leader with a large majority. The 49-year-old from the Westerwald received 98.98 percent of the delegate votes at the party conference in Mainz. She is the first woman to hold the office and, for the first time in 30 years, combines party and parliamentary group leadership in one person. The SPD has been the largest governing party in Rhineland-Palatinate for 33 years.

The new SPD leader wants to develop the program for the 2026 state elections in a multi-stage process with the members. “The highlight will be a congress in 2025,” she said before her election. “We are right in the middle of the people and issues.” The participation process should be designed based on this spirit.

Sven Teuber from Trier was elected deputy party chairman. The 41-year-old member of the state parliament received 90 percent of the 260 votes cast. Bätzing-Lichtenthäler had previously held the post, so the election had become necessary. Neither had any opposing candidates. Deputy party leaders are also Prime Minister Alexander Schweitzer and Finance Minister Doris Ahnen.

Roger Lewentz did not run again after twelve years as party leader. The 61-year-old was named the party’s second honorary chairman after Kurt Beck at the party conference. With Lewentz, the “we came before the me,” said Bätzing-Lichtenhtäler. With him there was no difference between the person and the politician.

The total of around 450 delegates and guests said goodbye to Lewentz and former Prime Minister Malu Dreyer with long applause and signs saying “Thank you Malu!” or “Thanks Roger!” stood. Dreyer was made an honorary member of the party.

Her successor Schweitzer thanked Dreyer for always choosing Rhineland-Palatinate and not going to Berlin, even as acting federal party leader. In difficult situations, everyone always looked to Malu and she always made things right for everyone, reported Schweitzer, who was most recently a minister under her. She was very warm, but also strict and determined.

“You have supported me for 29 years,” said Dreyer (63) to the SPD members. Roger Lewentz and she have always been able to rely on each other and she is sure that things will continue like this with Schweitzer and Bätzing-Lichtenthäler. “We are a strong SPD,” emphasized Dreyer. She wished SPD federal leader Lars Klingbeil, who spoke as a guest at the party conference, “that things will improve for the SPD in the federal government.” Former Prime Ministers Kurt Beck and Rudolf Scharping were also in the hall.

In her speech before the election, the new SPD leader announced that she wanted to win more members and get more women interested in SPD politics. Commitment to the party needs to be made easier so that anyone who has to make school sandwiches in the morning, then drive grandma to the pharmacy and pick up the children from soccer in the evening can also take part. “We also want to show the people who want to join us that they can join in from the first minute.”

What the SPD stands for needs to become clearer, emphasized Bätzing-Lichtenthäler, who is also the parliamentary group leader in the state parliament. “We stand for fair wages.” This means that the skilled worker must be able to afford a sufficiently large apartment with his wife and children.

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